Apple CEO handed more modest $4.2M salary for 2012 - Action News
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Science

Apple CEO handed more modest $4.2M salary for 2012

Apple CEO Tim Cook received $4.2 million US in pay for the latest fiscal year, a modest sum compared with last year, when the company's board set him up with stock now worth $510 million for taking the reins in 2011.

Shares given to Tim Cook in 2011 now worth $510 million

Apple CEO Tim Cook was handed a modest salary for 2012 after shares given to him as part of a sign-on grant last year are now worth $510 million. (Jeff Chiu/Associated Press)

Apple CEO Tim Cookreceived $4.2 million USin pay for the latest fiscal year, a modest sum compared with last year, when the company's board set him up with stock now worth $510 million for taking the reins in 2011.

Cook's pay for fiscal 2012, which ended in September, consisted of $1.4 million in salary, a bonus of $2.8 million, and $17,000 in company contributions to his 401(k) account and life insurance premiums, according to a filing.

Apple's board saw no need to give Cook additional shares in 2012 after the sign-on grant ofone million shares in 2011. Half of those shares vest in 2016 and the other half in 2021. A lot could happen to the value of the shares before Cook can cash them out, but the sign-on grant made him at least on paper the highest-paid U.S. CEO in 2011.

Cook did vest into shares worth $140 million in 2012. Those shares were granted earlier, when he was chief operating officer. He had been acting CEO for a while before the death of company co-founder Steve Jobs in October 2011.

Apple tends to grant shares to executives every other year. Cook's closest cohorts got big grants in 2012, including top hardware engineer Robert Mansfield, whoreceived shares worth $83 million. Chief financial officer Peter Oppenheimer and general counsel Bruce Sewell both got stock grants worth just over $66 million, more than double the value of the grants they got two years ago, reflecting the zooming value of Apple's stock.

The Cupertino, Calif.-based company's compensation policies are relatively simple. Missing are many of the perks that other CEOs command, such as country club fees and private use of company aircraft.